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Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Dr. Frank Stagg, retired professor of New Testament interpretation at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. The following quotes are from the first chapter of his book, The Holy Spirit Today. The chapter is titled, “The Holy Spirit and the Oneness of God.”
The New Testament is content to know God as the eternal Father, as the Word made flesh in Jesus of Nazareth, and as the abiding nearness of the Holy Spirit. It does not attempt to work out a formal doctrine of trinity. This is the work of later generations of Christians....Dr. Stagg’s “attempted restatement”: Jesus Christ is God uniquely present in a truly human life, but he is not a second god nor only one third of God. Jesus Christ is the Word made flesh (John 1:1). The Word which became flesh was God, not the second person of the trinity. John does not say, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was the Second Person of the trinity” (1:1). He says that “the Word was God.” Jesus Christ is more than “the Second person of the trinity”; He is Immanuel, God with us. Immanuel does not mean “the Second person of the trinity with us.” Immanuel is God with us.4 In reference to the Holy Spirit, Dr. Stagg affirms: The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of God, not the Spirit of the third person of the trinity. The Holy Spirit is God in his nearness and power, anywhere and anytime, the very divine presence incarnated in Jesus Christ now present in his people. He is not a third God nor one-third of God. He is God himself relating to us in judgment, guidance, strength, redemption, or otherwise.5 |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Professor Alister McGrath is the Principal of the Hall, and Professor of Historical Theology at Oxford University. He studied at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and served in a parish in Nottingham before joining the staff at Wycliffe. He is one of the most widely read and influential Christian writers in the world, and travels extensively to speak at conferences and missions.
If you look at the doctrine of the early church during the first two and a half centuries or so, you find that the doctrine of the Trinity has yet to be developed....That development took place in the third or fourth centuries.8 |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Karl Rahner was the leading Roman Catholic theologian of the 20th century.
. . . the use of the term ‘person’ in the doctrine of the Trinity becomes increasingly problematic . . . . We might wonder if it would be more appropriate to speak of three hypostases in God (or, to express it in a more modern form, of three modes of subsistence of the one God in his one sole nature) and in this way more easily to prevent popular misunderstandings of the doctrine of the Trinity and also in what really amounts to indiscriminate speculative interpretations of this doctrine in current theology. These quotes are from Karl Rahner, Theological Investigations, volume 18 |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Karl Barth is widely considered the most influential Christian theologian of the 20th century.
This distinction or order is the distinction or order of the three “persons,” or, as we prefer to say, the three “modes (or ways) of being” in God. . . . |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Dr. Millard J. Erickson is Distinguished Professor of Theology at Truett Seminary, Baylor University, and the author of the widely acclaimed systematics work Christian Theology.
... the doctrine of the Trinity ... presents what seems on the surface to be a self-contradictory doctrine ... this doctrine is not overtly or explicitly stated in Scripture.... the formulation of the doctrine has had a long and complex history ... the Scripture ... led the church to formulate and propound this strange doctrine.21 |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Heretics I say! Heretics! ..... Wait, that is how I believe!
Have anymore of these? |
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Just these for now. |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Sources?
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
THEY'RE LOOKING OUR WAY!!!
lol |
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Karl Rahner, Theological Investigations, volume 18
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Barth, Church Dogmatics, 355.
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Great finds!
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
My brother met a man who said that if he were going to try to adopt a Trinitarian viewpoint based out of Scripture, that he would have had to acknowledge that there were more than 15 additional deities that Christians should worship. He took all of them from the New Testament. If I am not mistaken my brother said that this man actually did worship in this fashion.
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Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
They should go the Benny Hinn route and claim a trinity of trinities. That way they can have 9 gosds and REALLY bring on the confusion!
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That is funny!:highfive |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Dr. W.A. Criswell, a past president of the Southern Baptist Association and pastor of the 25,000 member First Baptist Church in Dallas.
We are not going to see three Gods in heaven. Never persuade yourself that in glory we are going to look at God No. 1 and God No. 2 and God No. 3. No! There is one great Lord God. We know Him as our Father, we know Him as our Saviour, we know Him as the Holy Spirit in our hearts. There is one God and this is the great God, called in the Old Testament, Jehovah, and, incarnate, called in the New Testament Jesus, the Prince of heaven, who is coming.6 |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
At the end of a great message like that they will then reaffirm their belief in the Trinity. I do not understand that. Can they not hear the truths that they are saying? Can they really be so blinded by that doctrine? It always breaks my heart, and I wish that I could make them hear what they are saying. By the way, it applies to those who espouse the Tritheistic view point of the Trinity as well.
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I get tired of preaching to my radio when I hear them pull that type of stuff. That was what started this mess in the beginning anyway. A bunch of theologians who did not think that the basic Jewish concepts of God were good enough and needed to be explained in a new way for a better reception from the pagan public. |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
In the beginning there was the word which wasn't quite Jesus and the Holy Ghost and God, and they were with God and they were God...but not really...
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I think that we need a strong spitting smiley after that post. I thought that was funny, read it to Dad/Pastor, and he thought that it was funny. He also said that it was true. |
Re: Godhead Statements by Well-known theologians
Even 'well-known theologians' have problems when they attempt to make Jesus, God.
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